Institut Curie
Publishes on Head and Neck Cancer Studies, Lung Cancer Treatments and Mutations, Cancer-related Molecular Pathways. 8 papers and 1.3k citations.
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PURPOSE: Response Evaluation Criteria in Solid Tumors (RECIST) may underestimate the efficacy of targeted therapies. In hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) studies with sunitinib, RECIST-defined response rates are low, although hypodensity on computed tomography (CT) scans occurs more frequently. This exploratory analysis investigated tumor density as a surrogate endpoint of sunitinib activity in a phase II HCC study. EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN: Patients received sunitinib 50 mg/d (4 weeks on/2 weeks off). Tumor size and density were assessed on CT scans by using RECIST and Choi criteria, the latter of which classify a partial response as a 15% or more reduction in tumor density or a 10% or more reduction in tumor size. The overall percentage volume of tumor necrosis was calculated with volumetric reconstruction. Tumor perfusion parameters were assessed by using perfusion CT scans with specific acquisition. RESULTS: Among the 26 evaluable patients, 1 achieved a partial response and 22 had tumor stabilization by RECIST. In analysis of tumor density, 17 of 26 patients (65.4%) were responders by Choi criteria. Volumetric assessment showed major tumor necrosis (≥30% of tumor volume) in 10 of 21 patients (47.6%). Among four patients evaluated, tumor blood flow was reduced by 58.8% and blood volume by 68.4% after 4 weeks of treatment. The median time to progression (TTP) was 6.4 months. Patients with responses by Choi criteria had a significantly longer TTP (7.5 months) compared with nonresponders (4.8 months; HR = 0.33, two-sided P = 0.0182). CONCLUSIONS: Tumor density assessment suggested that radiologic endpoints in addition to RECIST may be considered to capture sunitinib activity in HCC.
// Marie-Paule Sablin 1, * , Coraline Dubot 1, 2, * , Jerzy Klijanienko 3 , Sophie Vacher 2 , Lamia Ouafi 3 , Walid Chemlali 2 , Martial Caly 3 , Xavier Sastre-Garau 3 , Emmanuelle Lappartient 3 , Odette Mariani 3 , José Rodriguez 4 , Thomas Jouffroy 4 , Angélique Girod 4 , Valentin Calugaru 5 , Caroline Hoffmann 4 , Rosette Lidereau 2 , Frédérique Berger 4, 6 , Maud Kamal 1 , Ivan Bieche 2, 7 , Christophe Le Tourneau 1, 8 1 Department of Medical Oncology, Institut Curie, Paris and Saint-Cloud, France 2 Unit of Pharmacogenomics, Department of Genetics, Institut Curie, Paris, France 3 Department of Biopathology, Institut Curie, Paris, France 4 Department of Surgery, Institut Curie, Paris, France 5 Department of Radiotherapy, Institut Curie, Paris, France 6 Department of Biostatistics, Institut Curie, Paris, France 7 EA7331, Paris Descartes University, Sorbonne Paris Cité, Faculty of Pharmaceutical and Biological Sciences, Paris, France 8 EA7285, Versailles-Saint-Quentin-en-Yvelines University, Versailles, France * These authors equally contributed to this work Correspondence to: Coraline Dubot, email: coraline.dubot@curie.fr Keywords: head and neck squamous cell carcinoma, gene expression, clinical prognostic and theranognostic biomarkers Received: January 21, 2016 Accepted: June 01, 2016 Published: June 18, 2016 ABSTRACT Background: We aimed at identifying druggable molecular alterations at the RNA level from untreated HNSCC patients, and assessing their prognostic significance. Methods: We retrieved 96 HNSCC patients who underwent primary surgery. Real-time quantitative RT-PCR was used to analyze a panel of 42 genes coding for major druggable proteins. Univariate and multivariate analyses were performed to assess the prognostic significance of overexpressed genes. Results: Median age was 56 years [35–78]. Most of patients were men (80%) with a history of alcohol (70.4%) and/or tobacco consumption (72.5%). Twelve patients (12%) were HPV-positive. Most significantly overexpressed genes involved cell cycle regulation (CCND1 [27%], CDK6 [21%]), tyrosine kinase receptors ( MET [18%], EGFR [14%]), angiogenesis ( PGF [301%], VEGFA [14%]), and immune system ( PDL1/CD274 [28%]). PIK3CA expression was an independent prognostic marker, associated with shorter disease-free survival. Conclusions: We identified druggable overexpressed genes associated with a poor outcome that might be of interest for personalizing treatment of HNSCC patients.
BACKGROUND: Copy number alterations (CNA) are acquired during the evolution of cancers from their early stage to metastatic stage. This study aims at analysing the clinical value of the identified metastasis-associated CNAs both in metastatic breast cancers (mBCs) and early breast cancers (eBCs). METHODS: Single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP)-array was performed on 926 biopsies from mBC patients, enrolled in SAFIR02-BREAST prospective trial. CNA profiles of eBCs from The Cancer Genome Atlas Breast Invasive Carcinoma (n = 770), Molecular Taxonomy of Breast Cancer International Consortium (n = 1620) and PACS04 trial (n = 243) cohorts were used as references for comparing mBCs and eBCs CNA profiles. Overall survival was the considered survival endpoint. RESULTS: Among the twenty-one genes frequently altered in ER + /HER2- mBCs: focal amplification of TERT was associated with poor outcome in the ER + /HER2- mBC population. Among the ER + /HER2- mBCs patients for whom CDK4/6 inhibitors information before biopsies collection was available: we identified seven genes on post-treatment biopsies, including the cyclin-dependent kinase 4 (CDK4), which was amplified in 9.8% of the ER + /HER2- mBCs pretreated population, as compared to 1.5% in the ER + /HER2- mBCs unpretreated population (P = 2.82E-04) as well as the 3 eBC populations. CDK4 amplification was associated with poor outcome in the ER + /HER2- eBCs. CONCLUSIONS: This study provides insights into the biology of mBCs and identifies clinically useful genomic features for future improvement of breast cancer patient management.